Roles for both the tripeptide, GSH, and individual amino acids in modifying the cellular response to oxygen deprivation-induced injury have been suggested by prior work in kidney and other tissues, but the precise interrelationships have not been clearly defined. We have studied the effects of GSH, its component amino acids, and related compounds on the behavior of isolated renal proximal tubules in a well characterized model of hypoxic injury in vitro. GSH, the combination of cysteine, glutamate, and glycine and glycine alone, when present in the medium during 30 min hypoxia, a duration sufficient to produce extensive irreversible injury in untreated tubules, were protective. Significant effects were detected at 0.25 mM concentrations of the reagents, and protection was nearly complete at concentrations of 1 mM and above. Glutamate and cysteine alone were not protective. The exogenous GSH added to the tubule suspensions was rapidly degraded to its component amino acids. Treatment of tubules with GSH or cysteine, but not glycine, increased intracellular GSH levels. Oxidized GSH was protective. Serine, N-(2-mercaptopropionyl)-glycine, and a panel of agents known to modify injury produced by reactive oxygen metabolites were without benefit. These observations identify a novel and potent action of glycine to modify the course of hypoxic renal tubular cell injury. This effect is independent of changes in cellular GSH metabolism and appears to be unrelated to alterations of cell thiols or reactive oxygen metabolites. Further elucidation of its mechanism may provide insight into both the basic pathophysiology of oxygen deprivation-induced cell injury and a practical way to ameliorate it.
J M Weinberg, J A Davis, M Abarzua, T Rajan
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
---|---|---|
Radiographic contrast media-induced tubular injury: Evaluation of oxidant stress and plasma membrane integrity
RA Zager, AC Johnson, SY Hanson |
Kidney International | 2003 |
Hypothermic Preservation of Hepatocytes
Q Meng |
Biotechnology Progress | 2003 |
Dietary glycine prevents chemical-induced experimental colitis in the rat
I Tsune, K Ikejima, M Hirose, M Yoshikawa, N Enomoto, Y Takei, N Sato |
Gastroenterology | 2003 |
Caveolae, caveolin and cav-p60 in smooth muscle and renin-producing cells in the rat kidney
M Voldstedlund, L Thuneberg, J Tranum-Jensen, J Vinten, EI Christensen |
Acta Physiologica Scandinavica | 2003 |
Impact of high pressure freezing on DH5α Escherichia coli and red blood cells
GJ Suppes, S Egan, AJ Casillan, KW Chan, B Seckar |
Cryobiology | 2003 |
Glycine—an inert amino acid comes alive
E Roth, M Zellner, B Wessner, E Strasser, N Manhart, R Oehler, A Spittler |
Nutrition | 2003 |
Is ischemic preconditioning of the kidney clinically relevant?
M Kosieradzki, M Ametani, JH Southard, MJ Mangino |
Surgery | 2003 |
Protective effect of glycine in mesenteric ischemia and reperfusion injury in a rat model
S Kallakuri, E Ascher, M Pagala, P Gade, A Hingorani, M Scheinman, K Mehraein, T Jacob |
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2003 |
Glycine protection of PC-12 cells against injury by ATP-depletion
Kan Zhang, Joel M Weinberg, Manjeri A Venkatachalam, Zheng Dong |
Neurochemical Research | 2003 |
Thyroxine prevents reoxygenation injury in isolated proximal tubule cells
E Erkan, A Sakarcan, G Haklar, S Yalcin |
Pediatric Nephrology | 2003 |
Blockade of maitotoxin-induced endothelial cell lysis by glycine and l -alanine
M Estacion, JS Weinberg, WG Sinkins, WP Schilling |
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology | 2003 |
Salmonella Rapidly Kill Dendritic Cells via a Caspase-1- Dependent Mechanism
AW van der Velden, M Velasquez, MN Starnbach |
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) | 2003 |